For all its technical progress, crypto still struggles to shake off its past. The image of energy-guzzling mining farms, blinking in the dark somewhere in Siberia or Texas, has stuck. The industry has moved toward more efficient systems, cleaner protocols and lighter consensus mechanisms - blockchain is still seen as part of the problem, not the solution.
So it's been interesting to see a new wave of projects that try to do something different. Instead of building digital layers on top of finance, some attempt to interact with the physical world itself - energy grids, sensor networks, local infrastructure.
They often get grouped under a term that's still finding its shape: DePIN (decentralized physical infrastructure networks). The name may be fuzzy, but the idea is clear enough:
use decentralized coordination to manage things like solar power, WiFi distribution, or environmental data — without relying on a central operator.
And an interesting example I've seen mentioned is small-scale solar infrastructure. In rural areas with limited grid access, individual solar panels can be connected to a local network and paired with smart contracts! The energy they produce is tokenized and distributed to nearby users or businesses, with payouts automated through blockchain protocols. Instead of relying on centralized utilities or subsidies, these systems allow communities to manage generation and distribution locally — with minimal overhead and built-in transparency. It's not widespread yet, but early prototypes exist in parts of Africa and Southeast Asia.
It sounds ambitious, maybe even overengineered... But it also reflects a shift in mindset: away from "how do we make tokens go up" toward "how do we make systems that work - even when no one is watching".
The hard part isn't technical - the hardware exists. What's missing is the connective tissue — economic, legal, and social — that makes these things sustainable outside of pitch decks.
And yet, the idea keeps resurfacing: what if blockchains could help coordinate shared physical resources?
Not because it's trendy, but because no one else is doing it particularly well.
What if Blockchain could help coordinate shared physical resources?
That really got me thinking.
We've been doing something similar with shared security but when it comes to physical resources we should grind harder on that part